PRAY FOR PRESIDENT TRUMP:

The room froze before it laughed. Trump flashed a grin, called himself “the bottom of the totem pole,” then casually suggested that if he ended a war,

“maybe they’ll let me in.” The crowd laughed, but it wasn’t clean laughter. It was nervous, uneasy, disbeliev… Continues…

For a split second, the mask slipped. In that offhand line about being “at the bottom of the totem pole,” Trump did something

he almost never does: he acknowledged weakness, or at least the appearance of it.

The crowd didn’t quite know how to process it.

Their laughter came late, jagged at the edges, tinged with the sense that they had just been given a glimpse behind the performance.

Then came the second half of the remark, the one that really hung in the air: if he ended the war, “maybe they’ll let me in.”

It sounded like a punchline, but it landed like a confession. Power, recognition, redemption—

framed not in policy or principle, but in a transactional fantasy of a single grand gesture.

The audience laughed again, but this time it felt like they were laughing to avoid asking what, exactly, he meant.

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